Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: Fritz Bennewitz on his Work in India
Chapter 1: The 1970s – Brechtian Experiments
Chapter 2: The Early 1980s – Firsts, Lows, and Highs
Chapter 3: The Mid-1980s – Brecht and the Bard in Bhopal
Chapter 4: The Late 1980s and Early 1990s – Gaining a Village, Losing a Country
Part II: Perspectives on Fritz Bennewitz in India
Chapter 5: Perspectives from Bennewitz’s Partners in India
Chapter 6: Essays on Bennewitz in India
Chronology of Bennewitz’s stays and projects in South Asia and his Indian projects in Germany
Glossary of Theatre Terms, Institutions, and Cultural References
Bibliography
Index
"The narrative that unfolds in Fritz Bennewitz in India documents major cross-cultural collaborations, and is a much-needed counterpoint to other forms of Euro-American interculturalism." -- Aparna Dharwadker, Professor of English and Interdisciplinary Theatre Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison "Fritz Bennewitz's work was a major contribution to Indian theatre and his letters are a valuable testimony and record of it. The translators have performed a wonderful feat in translating the original German into sensitive and highly readable English prose." -- Vasudha Dalmia, Professor Emerita of Hindi and Modern South Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley
Joerg Esleben is an associate professor and
Chair of the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures at the
University of Ottawa.
Rolf Rohmer is a Professor Emeritus of Theatre
at Leipzig University.
David G. John is a Distinguished Professor
Emeritus of German at the University of Waterloo as well as the
founding director of the Waterloo Centre for German
Studies.
"…[offers] detailed instances of how a Western director might think about working in rehearsal across cultural difference." - Ric Knowles, University of Guelph (University of Toronto Quarterly, vol 87 3, Summer 2018) "This exhaustively researched book by Joerg Esleben and his group represents the culmination of efforts to document and evaluate Bennewitz’s multifaceted work in India." - Vera Stegmann, Lehigh University (German Studies Review, vol 42 no 1, February 2019)
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